124 Fleniptera-fleteroptera. 
Bournemouth, Blatch; Fairlight, on heath, Butler ; Sheppey, 
Whitstable, Champion; Tunbridge Wells, Douglas and 
Scott; Penarth, South Wales, Billups; Lulworth, Hodd 
Hill, Dale. 
CAMPYLOSTIRA, Ficb. 
‘The very small species which represent this genus may 
be easily known by the emarginate anterior margin of the 
pronotum, which bears no hood or central projection ; 
the head has two strongly-marked obtuse antenniferous 
processes; the antenne have the first and second joints 
short and stout, nearly as wide as long, the third very 
long, the fourth about as long as the first and second 
together, narrow at its base, widening into a club towards 
the apex; rostral channel open in front; pronotum short, 
its sides nearly straight, and reticulated, disc with three 
keels; elytra without distinct membrane, sutures not 
parallel, membranous, with longitudinal subparallel nerves 
extending to the apex, the intervals with irregular 
meshes. 
There are four well-known European species mentioned 
by Dr. Puton in his Catalogue, and two doubtful ones, 
C. verna, Mall. (braehycera, Iieb.).—Small, eloneate 
oval, brownish, elytra transparent, reticulated. Head tes- 
taceous brown, dull, antennze with the terminal joint dark 
at its apex ; pronotum with the sides nearly straight, with 
two rows of meshes in front, and one behind, anterior 
margin emarginate, base produced in an obtuse angle over 
the scutellum, disc tricarinate, largely punctured, its lateral 
carine not reaching the anterior margin; elytra with 
irregular meshes, divided into series by three strong longi- 
tudinal veins; between the exterior vein and the lateral 
margin is one row of very small meshes (these are only 
visible from a sideways view), between the central vein and 
the exterior are two rows, between the central and interior 
